Toshiba case study PDF

Title Toshiba case study
Author Tricia Fatima Estrada
Course Public Accounting and Budgeting
Institution University of the East (Philippines)
Pages 2
File Size 71.2 KB
File Type PDF
Total Downloads 83
Total Views 150

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A case study material...


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Toshiba – a case of internal audit failure Toshiba, a 140-year-old pillar of Japan Inc, is caught up in the country's biggest accounting scandal since 2011. In 2011, Olympus Corp was embroiled in a scandal. In July 2015, Toshiba Corp president Hisao Tanaka and his two predecessors quit after investigators found that the company inflated earnings by at least $1.2 billion during the period 2009-2014. Toshiba is one of the early adopters of the corporate governance reforms initiated in Japan. The corporate governance structure met corporate governance standards. Time and again cases of corporate governance failures have provided evidence that good corporate governance structure does not necessarily lead to good corporate governance. Organisation culture is a critical determinant of the quality of corporate governance. Some of the observations of the independent investigation committee of the company on internal audit demand discussion and debate. The investigation committee observes, "According to the division of duties rules of Toshiba, the corporate audit division is in charge of auditing the corporate divisions, the companies, branch companies, and affiliated companies. However, in reality the corporate audit division mainly provided consultation services for the 'management' being carried out at each of the companies, etc (as part of the business operations audit), and it rarely conducted any services from the perspective of an accounting audit into whether or not an accounting treatment was appropriate." The observations of the committee give the impression that the fault of the internal audit in Toshiba was that it focused on consultation service rather than assurance service. Should internal audit avoid providing consultation service? I do not think so. It was not the fault of the internal audit that it provided consultation service. The fault was that it did not pay attention to accounting audit. In Toshiba, the top management used to set targets that are unachievable. There was excessive pressure from the top management to achieve those targets. The variable pay is a significant portion of the total pay. The compensation of executive officers comprises a base compensation based on title and a role compensation based on work content. Forty per cent to 45 per cent of the role compensation is based on performance of the overall company or business department. 'Challenge' to achieve unachievable targets and performance-based pay provide enough motivation to manage earnings. Therefore, accounting audit should have been a focus area for internal audit. Internal audit can function independently only if the audit committee is capable, independent and effective, and the internal auditor reports to the audit committee. In Toshiba, the audit committee was neither capable nor independent. The three external members of the audit committee had no knowledge of finance and accounting. An ex-Chief Financial Officer (CFO), who was the CFO during the timeframe when accounting irregularities occurred, was the only whole time member of the audit committee. Therefore, the internal audit was not independent of the management. Earnings management had the tacit approval of the top management. Therefore, it is not surprising that accounting audit was excluded from the scope of internal audit. It is incorrect to infer that the accounting audit did not receive the attention of the internal audit because its focus was on providing consultation service. Contemporary literature defines internal audit as 'assurance and consulting service'. The issue is of balancing between consultation service and assurance service. Problem arises when the internal auditor forgets that the internal audit is primarily an assurance function. The consultation service flows from the assurance service. Although, the primary objective of operation audit is to obtain assurance that the internal control that is installed to achieve operation objectives is adequate and operating effectively, the auditees look to the internal auditor for suggestions and consultancy. Such consultation service is a by-product of the assurance service. Auditees should not be denied the benefits of internal auditor's understanding of the industry and the business, and the challenges before the auditees in achieving operation

objectives. Exclusion of consultation service from the scope of internal audit would result in sub-optimal utilisation of internal audit resources. Organisation culture also determines the effectiveness of internal audit. The investigation committee observes, "A corporate culture existed at Toshiba whereby employees could not act contrary to the intent of their superiors". In such a culture an upright internal auditor cannot survive, particularly if he is not independent of the management. Perhaps, it is the reason that the internal audit in Toshiba had chosen the easy path of focusing on 'consultation service' only without reporting internal control weaknesses. Internal auditor is the 'eyes and ears' and 'go-to man' of the audit committee. Therefore, internal audit failure leads to corporate governance failure. Source: https://www.business-standard.com/article/opinion/toshiba-a-case-of-internal-audit-failure115080900760_1.html

Research questions (Corporate Governance): 1. Are there inherent conflicts in reporting responsibilities when internal auditors report to both the audit committee and to various levels of management? 2. To what extent are internal auditors involved in auditing the effectiveness of the governance structure of the organization? Does the internal audit role systematically vary with organizational characteristics? 3. How does the nature of internal audit activities differ when the internal audit function’s primary reporting responsibility is to senior management as opposed to the audit committee? 4. Using the questions in the control objectives for external governance process, choose at 3 questions (key issues) that can be most appropriately use to answer this case study....


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